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The Sun, 1970-11-18

1970-11-18-001

.1,
NO WAY TO TIE IT DOWN
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V.oL.48 -_Np, W -. One Section >M Page. ;;:^tff)^aSi?Aa__^.OBgQ< WSPiiJ»I>AYuNOV__MOER 18,1970
"j». -.[.'
Mrs. Bricker On
<&r" r-
10c per Copy; ftoo per yr. by Mall; §500 Outride County
An Invitation To Inflation
Tieing social security benefit increases to the
! Department of Labor's consumer price index would be
! the biggest invitation to inflation since they gave
[away balloons' at the circus.
! The consumer price index is a measure of average
! price levels. Automatically increasing benefits, as approved by the House of Representatives* would per-
; petualjy stimulate and institutionalize inflation, i Social security recipiehts would be among those who
: Would suffer the most. ,
The Senate should1 reject this idea. It would be
* like measuring a foot with a 12-inch rubber band.
So What's
A certain group of professional rabble-rousers today
arei commonly referi-ed to as the "new" left. But there
' is much evidence to indicate that there is nothing
' very new about their behavior or their ideas. Consider
j this quotation:
\ "Among the students of the universities and
J higher technical schools were yoiung men and women,
t in Slovenly attire, who called in question and ridiculed
^Jhegenerally received convictions and respectable
;'S"conventionalities of social life and wha talked of re-
■ i organizing sbciety on strictly scientific principles.
: They reversed the traditional order of things even in
: tri^il matters of. appearance, the jnales allowing the
hair: to g^,i<^»*W--<ifaie female adeptscuttingv it;
; snort . . • 'T^drjTa^fearance^'mi^nei^/'ajW coiiversar
tion were apttoi shock.ordinary peopK but vto this
IfheraSelves above the l^yel of58_w»ljed jprap^mto
despised' Philistinei*yff4ietAbiUtx, alnd «*W-ffl#?1°
scandalizeT people .still'| undfer the influence of what
^hey consider^ ahtiiiuateidi prejudices.
"Among the antiquated ^institutions whjch had: to •
be abolished afe obstructions |to real progress, were religion and family life, private property and centralized ■ administration by a federation of independent
(communes." '
; Is the above a definition of the Hippies and Yip-
pieaof 1970? According to one of our informants, this
is the description of the Nihilists, so named by the
Russian novelist Ivan Sergeevich Turgenev in "Fathers'and Sons" — written in 1862!
/The Nihilists were the early forerunners of those ,
who would later be known as the Ma_risW_eriinists---or
the modern day Leninoids, as described in Eugene
OVEethvin's "Riot Makws."Methvi__ refers to the Len-
: inoid as the "whole array of people who userthe tecih-
niques of Lenin without his ideology . . . the opportunists ... the compulsive revolutionaries ... the
: philisopher thugs . . . who enjoy disorder and violence
: because these are signs of the-approaching Kingdom
: Come."
History is very largely an account of 'the struggle
' between those who would build and preserve; » civil-...
: ized society, and those who would dtestroy. Today v?e
: seem to have more than the normal share of Nihilists,
; or IJepii^oids.But none of it is really new, ;;■'■';■-■
WwTW^WoW~7^~^~
■ \. The elections are over; Democrats, Republicans
■ and. Independents will be happy or uphaopy, as the,
case iriay be** mthe various areas of our great couii^
try. But iiow that the turmoil of elections are1 over,
the big tasks are- still ahead; all of the problems and
the issues raised in the election process are still before
us, and must; be solved,, one way or thei other. And
the solving of these great problems is not a matter to
be left pimply:; .6 those .elected: to office; this is a re-
.; spo^sibi6*y;-w?.&hv falls upW ;^ all
''' Atoe^o^^-^ieyw^' wiilj-; <^?J!$$k ^;: ■ T>^^^/.v".'!k. ^..
_B^^any; years; it was assumed that iou* envit6ri-;
ment V^l the soil, the w^ter, and the atmosphere^
. could'afosoirb any; load' put upon it. Now it is obvious
.thatvMother Nature has not been able to carry tiv& ex.
.tra stresses caused by our booming population increase—and that help must be given. 'I*he answers to
ttus y&eyvesA problem arei not; going kto ;be. .Bbund;,,,.
r oY^Sght^br < «an - we. lei.&ej'i^ Jo vbu|^|pd^i^an#.^; h
ing^wime, .ehdangetfiu* the Olives and; prop-
-erty$i^
. ernmieht does bear ii large responsibility for the pror
tection of its citizens, herei too, the role of each
-citizeit.can and should play a major part. It is within
the power b|/each of us to help, in some w»y-7-ari^
this/we,should do.„,-..,k -; "k \„'\ " ^-,
As Moderator
Two staff members of the
North Canton Public Library;
Mrs. Roger Schlub and Mrs.
Jack Farbeann attended the first
of the workshops on III Service
Training on Wednesday, Nov.'
18, at the Rodman Public Library in Alliance. ,
Mrs. Elizabeth Bricker, local
librarian, was chairman for
this particular workshop and
served as moderator.
Others on the panel included
Mrs. C. R. Looman and Mr.
Walter Pretorlus, trustees of
Canton Public Library and
Dover Public Library respectively; Mr. David Griffith, Mrs.
Caroline Mohr and Miss Ethel
Conrad, librarians respectively'
of Youngstown and Mahoning.
County, Holmes County; and
Massillon Public Libraries,
The subject of the first workshop was "The Library ~ln the
Community." A repeat1 of the
workshop will be held at Coshocton on Thursday, Nov. 19,
There will be six such workshops scheduled once each
month over a period of six
months. They are sponsored
cooperatively by the, Mideast
Ohio Library Assembly, a,volunteer grouping of several adjacent countieis. v
Darrel Mansell, president of
the board of trustees of the
Canton Public Library is general chairman of the assembly.
Mary Louise Lowe., head librarian of the Louisville Public
Library is the chairman of the
entire series of workshops.
The remaining five workshops Will be devoted to topics
related to fundamentals of good
library service. Each of the
sessions will be held in a different location in order to ease
the problem of transportation.
■ ■
Thanksgivin
Set In Area Churches
The United Thanksgiving Service sponsored by
the North Canton Ministerial Association will be held
on Wednesday, Nov. 25, at 7:80 p.m. at Faith VnitH
Methodist Church at 300 9th St, NW. fThe Rev. Dean
V. Roush, pastor of Grace United Methodist Church*
and the association president, will deliver the mes-"
sage.
CHILDREN'S liOOK WEEK. Marking this aa National Children's Bool-
Week, NortttJ, X^nton l>ib|Miry arranged for perforrt_ances fMoifday ahid WedHes-
, diay of a pUp^t-shoWi^fThe^ttte Lost Angel" for its two classes of Story Hour
youngsters, Mfs. Donald Ramsey, story hour teacher, admires .the puppet figures
with young Susan Aman, whose mather.-Mrs. Celestine Aman of 1626 Ambler
Ave. SW, ami grandmother, Mrs. Sylvester West of Oanton, staged tlie show.
Susan is heard as thi. tfecordeifl voice of the tiost Angel. Observed county-wide
and arranged by the tch-idren's librarians, the week also featured displays. of
books named .in the untique "Storybook CJOokbpok" by Carol MacGregor, which
is a fiction b<K)k full''of recipes from literature. Mrs. Sara Lee Donze, coordinator of Childretfsi^rvices at Cajiton Piiblic Library, arranged the week-long
program. Mrs. A.. Wltyne; Ifeibel, local cHiIdren's librarian, arranged the special
!■ program here.'. •..■••. '.-y:S ^;y'- 'J| .■,,:•»"':■'.'
Sharing in this ecumenical
' service of worship are the host
church, Grace United Methodist, Northminster United
Presbyterian Church,St. Paul's
Catholic Church, Community
Christian Church, Zion United
Church of Christ and First
Baptist Church.
Several other area churches
plan individual services.
The offering received at the
United Thanksgiving service
will be donated to the FISH
program and a member of that
Christian service group, Mark'
Kalagidis, will share in the
service.
Donations of canned goods,
new or .used clothing as well
as money, will be accepted for
the offering.
Pastor Roush has served
Grace Church for 18 months.
He is a graduate of Otterbein
College and the United Theological Seminary in Dayton.
Married and the father of five
children, he was pastor at the
Beach City United Methodist
Church for nine years before
corning to North Canton.
Snaring the pulpit with Rev.
Roush, the host pastor Rev.
William Brown will give the
call to worship and Benediction. Rev. Donald Andrews of
Y\9mmj*wt$
V®*
gff»J_»J(M*M"-S?
Some 100 young swimmers
will: debut ,_<* 'l.orth Cahtbn
Comm unity Building- YMCA under the Nemesis banner in the
Northeast Ohio YMCA ,Swim
Leagjie on Saturday, Nov. 21.
Girls teams of Cadets, Preps,
Juniors and Intermediates will
host Alliance here on Saturday
at 1:45 while the boys teams
in those.divisions willbeswimming atAshland. s
The 10-event meets are open
to the public.)
Mrs. Jean Losch' and Miss
- Janet Anderson are coaching
the girls teams and coaches
for the boys are Howard Elliott,
Juniors and Intermediates; Kim
Morrison, Preps^ and Dick Bu-
kowski, Cadets.
The boys will have th<-ir first
home meet Dec. 19 hosting:
Massillon. Their schedule includes Dec. 5, at Canton; Jan.
9, at Wooster; Jan. 23, at Alii- .
ance; Jan. 30, at Dover; Feb.
• 6, Lorain here, and Feb. 13, '
at Cuyahoga Falls.. k ,
The swim schedule for the
girls teams includes Dec. 5,
Willoughby here; Dec. 19, at
Cuyahoga Fall's; Jan. 9, Lorain
here; Jan. 16, Ashland here;
Jan. 23, at Warren; Jan. 3Q,
Wbpster here; Feb. 6, Warren
at Canton YW; Feb. 13, Youngstown here; Feb. 20, at Paines-
ville; Feb. 27, Massillon here,
and March 7, at Canton YWCA. .
Parents of swimmers will,
maintain a refreshment stand
during home meets.
Zion Mifed 0imch Appoints
The Ccmsistdry o| ?lon lJni|fe*;
Church of Christ ^hbtmce^ the
appointment; of J^iiss Judl^Aln
Schaefer to ke^.e. as directorfOf
ss^cn^er \^^ inital''
led jduria|rt|ie- service Sunday,
Nov; 2Cat 7:30 p.m. Which_.ill
also formally install* the
church's new. pastor, Dr#wil-
liam Koshew-i. , ; ■•'/.■'?
A 23-yeat-old native of Chicago, Miss Schaefer received
her bachelor of arts degree in
Christian Education from Elmhurst (111.) College, with a minor
in psychology and Sociology.
For the' past two years she
has served in the Christian Education ministry at Grace Congregational United Church of
Christ in Two Rivers, Wis.,
coordinating the ■ educational
program for children, youth
and adults, with an emphasis
on adult and youth development.
In 1966, as work experience
during college suti-iher vacation, she participated in the
Mayor's Court
the peace, case dismissed for
lack of evidence.
. _ . _. , WilUamJamesMetzger,1213
In cases heard in Mayor s Terrace Dr# mt disturbing
Courtlast Thursday: ft c f^led to j^^
Terry DePaola, 414 34th St. waj,r™t wis issued
SE, Canton, driving whileunder Wf^ £eSTtVafflc court
license suspension, four ..days jJtS™- '
in Stark County Jail /allure l"lZCM'm*rw, 1266
to obey right turn lane, 1 day c . NE Mtt8SiUoa4 ,jrt_
In jail.^^^Expired^emie nlates,, S^^VaS Se Sy -
street, $7-Court costs. c~ -<■.
Northminister wiU lead the
prayer of invocation and unison
Prayer of Confession.
Rev. Fr. Anthony Fasline of
St. Paul's Catholic Church will
give the New Testament scripture, using the text of Luke 12:
15-21 which is the parable of
the "rich fool." He will also
lead the responsive reading of
Psalm 145.
Rev. Wheeler T. Harden, associate pastor of Community
Christian Church, will lead
worshipers in the Apostle's
Creed. Rev. William Koshewa of
Zion United will offer the
Prayer of Thanksgiving and
Rev. James L. Bunch of First
Baptist will have theOldTesta-
ment text, reading Psalm 116.
Music will be presented by
Faith Methodist Chancel choir,
directed by Mrs. Robert Barch
and accompanied by Mrs. Robert Schwab at the organ. The
anthem will be Willan's "Sing
To Tbe Lord of Harvest."
-Other Services Setr-
Greentown United Methodist
Church will host a combined
service with the Greentown Na>>
zarene Church on Wednesday,
Nov. 25, at 7:30 and individual
services for that hour are planned at Holy Cross Lutheran,
Zion Lutheran and Grace Brethren Churches. '-,.
First Church of Christ,
Scientist, will hold a special
service Thanksgiving toorning
at 11 at 1014 Cleveland Ave.
NW. Charles Rltz and Mrs.
Ruth Sowd will serve £s readers and Larry Kehl will be
soloist, accompanied by organist James Lotz.
$7 court costs suspended.
Horace .Reynolds Blakely,
1520 BryaA Ave. SW, Canton,
speeding, $10 and costs.
Patricia Agnes Canfield,
11104 Easton St., Alliance, driving wrong way on a one-way
street, $5 and costs.
Patrick Robert Koury, 315
Cornelia Ave. NE, Canton,
speeding, $10 and costs. Signal light violation, $5 and costs. Qn one.^ay street> ,$7 caut
James Wayne Headley, 417
Gilmbre NW, Canton, signal
light violation $7 court costs.
Joanne J. Elliott, 7424 Brook-
side Ave., Louisville, wrong
way on one-way street, $7 court
costs. Driving on expired license, $10 and costs.
'Sylvia A. Harpster, 370 Mar-
viel Dr., Akron, wrong way
•■'^ae>^»-
Miss Judith Schaefer
Illinois Department of Public
Aid Trainee program In Joliet,
111., as a caseworker. The following summer she spent at the
Evangelical Children's Home in
St. Louis, Mo., as a cottage
house-parent, pool guard and
office aide.
PEO Sisterhood
'.B-Vji'V;;.
' Chapter BB Of the PEO Sisterhood will meet on Monday,
Nov. 23, at 8 p.m.at the home
of Mrs. Robert Dively at 955
Fair Oaks Aye. SW.'Mrs. Carl
Roberts will be assistant
hostess., ■ '■; ;!; k.
Thie program will be given
by r Miss Nancy Dively, Mrs.
Joseph Perkovitch, Mrs; Ralph
Warburton arid Mrs: Eugene
Schafer. ? ;i'.
Mrs. Robert Barch hNetv
«!:;;
call upon "government" to do'all is-a grave error; be-
" cause Wstbry^ sho^vs^ that bigger /aiitd; 1. igger? gjpiy^n-
inent means less arid less individual freedom! $ut
inore individual freedom calls for. an equivalent pro-
> portipn of • more inividual responsibility—rand that is
^thegoal all of us should have. v k :
on Dec. 1 will be .MrsiRobert
Barch of 516 Briar Aye. NE.
She will succeed-Mrs. Violet
Wilson, who has resigned as
director and will be moving
to Bay City., Mich., following
her marriage-here Nov. 27
,to^ii^sK,;^iift;.^kvv ;
Mrs. B^ch has; served as
director; of:, the ; local* Senior
Citizens Chorus forfthe;1 past
year. ,. 'v.- '','•'•'■'."'
The mother of four children,
she, Is also the choir director
at Faith United Methodist'
Churcte5She;rece.iWdhertrJlin-
Rotary World
Study Work
Saluted Here'
Rotary Foundation Week is
being marked here and will
be highlighted at the dinner
meeting of North Canton Rotary
Club.Thursday at 6:30' p.m. at
Community Christian Church.
Harold Royer, chairman of
the Rotary district group study
exchange project, will present
theprbgram. .'
Ty Laine, president of North
Canton Rotary, said the foundation provides educational and
vocational study programs
throughout the world for qualified young persons to help foster
world understanding and friendship by people-to-pepple con-
fitct'. >".''■' k".'
;;' Since 1947, Rotary has' sent
riiore. jthan 4,000 young men and
women abroad for a year of
study at a cost of more than
$10 million. During. 1970, the
foundation will award some $1.7
million to more than 600 young
$pMkvv.v.v.,
, ^jfftdutite fellowships, undergraduate scholarships, and
technical training awards for
young business and professional
|nen are also available.
Roy L. Shiflet, 602
Ave. NW, Canton, driving while
under the influence of alcohol,
$100 and costs, three days In
jail ai}d 30-day license suspension.
John N. Vito, 2913 Parklane
NW, Canton, speeding, $15 and
costs and no Ohio operator's
license, $7 court costs.
Ted Borden, 131 GeonoaRd.
Canton, assault and battery,
plead not guilty and waived
jury trial. Trial dkte to
scheduled.
Rosemary Metzger, 1213
Terrace Dr.
costs.
Helen Pauline Schneider,
5768 Lake Cable Ave. NW, Canton, wrong way tin a one-way
street, $7 court costs.
Lee A.Stilgenbauer,937Race
St., Dover, wrong way on oneway street, $7 court costs.
John Robert Stewart, 723
Lawrence Rd.. NE, Canton,
speeding, $15 and costs.
Thomas Wayne Gregory, 6923
{!" Portage St. NW, wrong way on
one-way street, $7 court costs.
Margaret A. Fedor, 933Wal-
nw disturbing nut Ave- ^_E» Canton, stop sign
NW, disturbing ^^^ $7 court|C0Btfc
On Indiana U.
Aid Foundation
Mark R. Stevens of 632 W.
Fifth St., is among the 384
new members of the Indiana
University Student Foundation.
The Student Foundation is a
650-member committee of Juniors and Seniors that functions
as an arm of the Indiana University Foundation in raising r
scholarship money and conducting other programs of benefit
to the campus and community.v
From more than 1,200 appll- ■■
cants annually, Student Foundation members are chosen on''<■
the basis of grades, previous
service, and leadership at the ,
University.
Among the many activities
of the I. U. Student Foundation,
by far the biggest and the most
publicized is the spring Little
500 Weekend. /
Holiday Sun Has f f #i||i
rMl._ !*________.___* . n^yM^^Bki
Mrs. Robert Barch
Assuming the post of director
of North Canton Senior Citizens
Mrs.i Barch was -formerly
active in; Cahiori Civic Opera
and directed the Nationwide Iri-
surancie choir. She has appeared
with the Malone Madrigal
•Singers... '■/.■■.,
tofihe'Tl
ursday, Nf||26, pub-
day ;fbr vthevSun win
. adyij^ced to permit Wednes-
d^^very. , v
\.The', deadline for all adver-
tislng and news copy will be
noon on Monday for the earlier
publicationk
CAROUSEL DRESS RE
choir's production, _>f ^,Gar6uselv^ .. ,..„,_...__ .
and Saturday nights, Nov."720^21;,to:^eu^^
hearsals were staged Monday and Wednesday nights and the photographer captured (1. to r.) Cindy Pace, Debby DeFine, Casey Elliott, Lorrie Weeks and
Ken Swickard as they run .through a scene. Martin Alexawier, head,'of vocal ■
music, is directing the production, which will have the accompaniment of the
Hoover High School qrchestra, led by Robert McCleaster. Tickets are available ;.;
at the door for both shows.
wd#^fev?^a_jv'
r.V,!^

.1,
NO WAY TO TIE IT DOWN
•mm
mmi
'■■■y" \}*m******t0mmmmm**yVf*\\\m*\\ ili.ili^i^W^^WMMwfatWM
V.oL.48 -_Np, W -. One Section >M Page. ;;:^tff)^aSi?Aa__^.OBgQ< WSPiiJ»I>AYuNOV__MOER 18,1970
"j». -.[.'
Mrs. Bricker On
^^^/.v".'!k. ^..
_B^^any; years; it was assumed that iou* envit6ri-;
ment V^l the soil, the w^ter, and the atmosphere^
. could'afosoirb any; load' put upon it. Now it is obvious
.thatvMother Nature has not been able to carry tiv& ex.
.tra stresses caused by our booming population increase—and that help must be given. 'I*he answers to
ttus y&eyvesA problem arei not; going kto ;be. .Bbund;,,,.
r oY^Sght^br < «an - we. lei.&ej'i^ Jo vbu|^|pd^i^an#.^; h
ing^wime, .ehdangetfiu* the Olives and; prop-
-erty$i^
. ernmieht does bear ii large responsibility for the pror
tection of its citizens, herei too, the role of each
-citizeit.can and should play a major part. It is within
the power b|/each of us to help, in some w»y-7-ari^
this/we,should do.„,-..,k -; "k \„'\ " ^-,
As Moderator
Two staff members of the
North Canton Public Library;
Mrs. Roger Schlub and Mrs.
Jack Farbeann attended the first
of the workshops on III Service
Training on Wednesday, Nov.'
18, at the Rodman Public Library in Alliance. ,
Mrs. Elizabeth Bricker, local
librarian, was chairman for
this particular workshop and
served as moderator.
Others on the panel included
Mrs. C. R. Looman and Mr.
Walter Pretorlus, trustees of
Canton Public Library and
Dover Public Library respectively; Mr. David Griffith, Mrs.
Caroline Mohr and Miss Ethel
Conrad, librarians respectively'
of Youngstown and Mahoning.
County, Holmes County; and
Massillon Public Libraries,
The subject of the first workshop was "The Library ~ln the
Community." A repeat1 of the
workshop will be held at Coshocton on Thursday, Nov. 19,
There will be six such workshops scheduled once each
month over a period of six
months. They are sponsored
cooperatively by the, Mideast
Ohio Library Assembly, a,volunteer grouping of several adjacent countieis. v
Darrel Mansell, president of
the board of trustees of the
Canton Public Library is general chairman of the assembly.
Mary Louise Lowe., head librarian of the Louisville Public
Library is the chairman of the
entire series of workshops.
The remaining five workshops Will be devoted to topics
related to fundamentals of good
library service. Each of the
sessions will be held in a different location in order to ease
the problem of transportation.
■ ■
Thanksgivin
Set In Area Churches
The United Thanksgiving Service sponsored by
the North Canton Ministerial Association will be held
on Wednesday, Nov. 25, at 7:80 p.m. at Faith VnitH
Methodist Church at 300 9th St, NW. fThe Rev. Dean
V. Roush, pastor of Grace United Methodist Church*
and the association president, will deliver the mes-"
sage.
CHILDREN'S liOOK WEEK. Marking this aa National Children's Bool-
Week, NortttJ, X^nton l>ib|Miry arranged for perforrt_ances fMoifday ahid WedHes-
, diay of a pUp^t-shoWi^fThe^ttte Lost Angel" for its two classes of Story Hour
youngsters, Mfs. Donald Ramsey, story hour teacher, admires .the puppet figures
with young Susan Aman, whose mather.-Mrs. Celestine Aman of 1626 Ambler
Ave. SW, ami grandmother, Mrs. Sylvester West of Oanton, staged tlie show.
Susan is heard as thi. tfecordeifl voice of the tiost Angel. Observed county-wide
and arranged by the tch-idren's librarians, the week also featured displays. of
books named .in the untique "Storybook CJOokbpok" by Carol MacGregor, which
is a fiction b>
zarene Church on Wednesday,
Nov. 25, at 7:30 and individual
services for that hour are planned at Holy Cross Lutheran,
Zion Lutheran and Grace Brethren Churches. '-,.
First Church of Christ,
Scientist, will hold a special
service Thanksgiving toorning
at 11 at 1014 Cleveland Ave.
NW. Charles Rltz and Mrs.
Ruth Sowd will serve £s readers and Larry Kehl will be
soloist, accompanied by organist James Lotz.
$7 court costs suspended.
Horace .Reynolds Blakely,
1520 BryaA Ave. SW, Canton,
speeding, $10 and costs.
Patricia Agnes Canfield,
11104 Easton St., Alliance, driving wrong way on a one-way
street, $5 and costs.
Patrick Robert Koury, 315
Cornelia Ave. NE, Canton,
speeding, $10 and costs. Signal light violation, $5 and costs. Qn one.^ay street> ,$7 caut
James Wayne Headley, 417
Gilmbre NW, Canton, signal
light violation $7 court costs.
Joanne J. Elliott, 7424 Brook-
side Ave., Louisville, wrong
way on one-way street, $7 court
costs. Driving on expired license, $10 and costs.
'Sylvia A. Harpster, 370 Mar-
viel Dr., Akron, wrong way
•■'^ae>^»-
Miss Judith Schaefer
Illinois Department of Public
Aid Trainee program In Joliet,
111., as a caseworker. The following summer she spent at the
Evangelical Children's Home in
St. Louis, Mo., as a cottage
house-parent, pool guard and
office aide.
PEO Sisterhood
'.B-Vji'V;;.
' Chapter BB Of the PEO Sisterhood will meet on Monday,
Nov. 23, at 8 p.m.at the home
of Mrs. Robert Dively at 955
Fair Oaks Aye. SW.'Mrs. Carl
Roberts will be assistant
hostess., ■ '■; ;!; k.
Thie program will be given
by r Miss Nancy Dively, Mrs.
Joseph Perkovitch, Mrs; Ralph
Warburton arid Mrs: Eugene
Schafer. ? ;i'.
Mrs. Robert Barch hNetv
«!:;;
call upon "government" to do'all is-a grave error; be-
" cause Wstbry^ sho^vs^ that bigger /aiitd; 1. igger? gjpiy^n-
inent means less arid less individual freedom! $ut
inore individual freedom calls for. an equivalent pro-
> portipn of • more inividual responsibility—rand that is
^thegoal all of us should have. v k :
on Dec. 1 will be .MrsiRobert
Barch of 516 Briar Aye. NE.
She will succeed-Mrs. Violet
Wilson, who has resigned as
director and will be moving
to Bay City., Mich., following
her marriage-here Nov. 27
,to^ii^sK,;^iift;.^kvv ;
Mrs. B^ch has; served as
director; of:, the ; local* Senior
Citizens Chorus forfthe;1 past
year. ,. 'v.- '','•'•'■'."'
The mother of four children,
she, Is also the choir director
at Faith United Methodist'
Churcte5She;rece.iWdhertrJlin-
Rotary World
Study Work
Saluted Here'
Rotary Foundation Week is
being marked here and will
be highlighted at the dinner
meeting of North Canton Rotary
Club.Thursday at 6:30' p.m. at
Community Christian Church.
Harold Royer, chairman of
the Rotary district group study
exchange project, will present
theprbgram. .'
Ty Laine, president of North
Canton Rotary, said the foundation provides educational and
vocational study programs
throughout the world for qualified young persons to help foster
world understanding and friendship by people-to-pepple con-
fitct'. >".''■' k".'
;;' Since 1947, Rotary has' sent
riiore. jthan 4,000 young men and
women abroad for a year of
study at a cost of more than
$10 million. During. 1970, the
foundation will award some $1.7
million to more than 600 young
$pMkvv.v.v.,
, ^jfftdutite fellowships, undergraduate scholarships, and
technical training awards for
young business and professional
|nen are also available.
Roy L. Shiflet, 602
Ave. NW, Canton, driving while
under the influence of alcohol,
$100 and costs, three days In
jail ai}d 30-day license suspension.
John N. Vito, 2913 Parklane
NW, Canton, speeding, $15 and
costs and no Ohio operator's
license, $7 court costs.
Ted Borden, 131 GeonoaRd.
Canton, assault and battery,
plead not guilty and waived
jury trial. Trial dkte to
scheduled.
Rosemary Metzger, 1213
Terrace Dr.
costs.
Helen Pauline Schneider,
5768 Lake Cable Ave. NW, Canton, wrong way tin a one-way
street, $7 court costs.
Lee A.Stilgenbauer,937Race
St., Dover, wrong way on oneway street, $7 court costs.
John Robert Stewart, 723
Lawrence Rd.. NE, Canton,
speeding, $15 and costs.
Thomas Wayne Gregory, 6923
{!" Portage St. NW, wrong way on
one-way street, $7 court costs.
Margaret A. Fedor, 933Wal-
nw disturbing nut Ave- ^_E» Canton, stop sign
NW, disturbing ^^^ $7 court|C0Btfc
On Indiana U.
Aid Foundation
Mark R. Stevens of 632 W.
Fifth St., is among the 384
new members of the Indiana
University Student Foundation.
The Student Foundation is a
650-member committee of Juniors and Seniors that functions
as an arm of the Indiana University Foundation in raising r
scholarship money and conducting other programs of benefit
to the campus and community.v
From more than 1,200 appll- ■■
cants annually, Student Foundation members are chosen on''f ^,Gar6uselv^ .. ,..„,_...__ .
and Saturday nights, Nov."720^21;,to:^eu^^
hearsals were staged Monday and Wednesday nights and the photographer captured (1. to r.) Cindy Pace, Debby DeFine, Casey Elliott, Lorrie Weeks and
Ken Swickard as they run .through a scene. Martin Alexawier, head,'of vocal ■
music, is directing the production, which will have the accompaniment of the
Hoover High School qrchestra, led by Robert McCleaster. Tickets are available ;.;
at the door for both shows.
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